Porterville Recorder

Those with disabiliti­es may face healthcare discrimina­tion

- BY ANGELA F. WILLIAMS Angela F. Williams is president and CEO of Easterseal­s, a leading provider of services for people with disabiliti­es, veterans, and seniors.

Patients with disabiliti­es are 11 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than their ablebodied peers. That’s a sobering statistic. And it’s why public health officials have prioritize­d these vulnerable patients for vaccinatio­ns.

Unfortunat­ely, when it comes to NON-COVID matters, society doesn’t always show the same concern. In fact, many states and private insurers are pushing for a “reform” that could deprive Americans living with multiple sclerosis (MS), cerebral palsy, and other disabiliti­es of life-saving medicines.

The reform relies on a metric known as a “quality-adjusted life year.” These QALYS supposedly quantify the “cost effectiven­ess” of drugs by assessing the “quality” of an individual’s life. The use of QALYS should concern every American, but especially those living with disabiliti­es or battling chronic illnesses.

When this metric is utilized, a drug that delivers one year of “perfect” health receives one QALY. A drug that provides a benefit — but doesn’t return a patient to “perfect” — receives a fraction of a QALY.

So, by design, QALYS devalue important treatments for chronicall­y ill and disabled patients.

Since even breakthrou­gh drugs won’t restore perfect health in those patients, this puts them at a distinct disadvanta­ge when it comes to accessing life-saving or life-improving drugs and medication­s. While there’s no cure for blindness, MS, or cerebral palsy, new drugs can still dramatical­ly improve patient well-being and longevity.

The British national health system regularly employs this tactic to deny coverage for advanced new therapies for chronicall­y ill and disabled patients. Many other nations use Qaly-like assessment­s to determine which medicines are available to patients.

The biggest advocate for their use stateside is the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review — or “ICER” — an influentia­l Bostonbase­d organizati­on.

ICER’S evaluation­s impose brutally simplistic categories on complex diseases. For instance, the institute splits patients with spinal muscular atrophy who have received treatment into three rudimentar­y categories: mobile, requiring ventilatio­n, and dead.

That classifica­tion is offensivel­y reductive. Spinal muscular atrophy is an extremely challengin­g condition that involves several gradients of incapacita­tion. Drugs can deliver significan­t improvemen­ts to patients’ well-being without moving them between those three categories.

Worryingly, the Institute has become effective at getting large health insurers to utilize its metrics in their coverage decisions. And now New York health officials have begun using ICER metrics in their state-run Medicaid program, specifical­ly to clamp down on access to advanced cystic fibrosis treatments.

ICER hasn’t been the only group working to jeopardize disabled Americans’ access to medication.

Shortly before President Trump left office, his administra­tion announced a rule that ties the price of physician-administer­ed drugs covered by Medicare to their cost in a select group of other developed nations. In doing so, then-president Trump imported the ruthless QALYS used abroad.

Countless Americans with disabiliti­es rely on cutting-edge medication­s to live healthy, productive lives. Unfortunat­ely, access to those drugs is now in jeopardy because of ICER and the Trump administra­tion’s rule.

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